Are you up to date with your vaccines? What about your family, are they? Vaccination time can be confusing, not just for the patient. Here is a view from nurse, educator, mom Sharon Buchbinder on vaccinations and safety in the new IOM (Institute of Medicine) expert report. The IOM Report on The Childhood Immunization Schedule … Continue reading »
Tag Archives: Institute of Medicine
SNAP What Can You Get with Food Stamps?
Have you heard of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, SNAP? Harsh Times SNAP is the new name for food stamps and now comes as an electronic card. A clear sign of harsh economic times in the U.S., 46 million people use food stamps, SNAP, to add food to their groceries each week. That’s 1 in … Continue reading »
We Need an Escape Fire – Heating Up Health Care
What are the leading causes of death in the US? You may think the top killers are things like obesity and cancer, which get a lot of press. But real killers are not only our health conditions or diseases. Sometimes the cause of death for a patient in the US, in fact the 3rd most common cause, … Continue reading »
Top 10 Summer Free Reading from Institute of Medicine (IOM)
What is on your summer reading list? Healthcare reform is on top, not just for politicians, but for readers too. For readers of the free reports from IOM, the top 10 this summer start with the Future of Nursing report. Nurses lead healthcare, and are no handmaidens of the doctors now - as nurse Sharon Buchbinder comments here . Equal … Continue reading »
App Challenge Going Viral for Health
Are you up on all your shots? Are you sure? What about the family? Hard to know, and tough to keep up with the changing rules on who should be immunized when for what. The app challenge “Go Viral to Improve Health” now has a winner. The app challenge contest was set up by science … Continue reading »
Evolution of an Epidemic
What would you think if a third of the world’s population were infected with a bacterium? And if this was one that caused a deadly disease—one that was becoming resistant to all known drugs? Science fiction, maybe? In fact, a third of the world is infected with just such a thing. Two billion people are … Continue reading »
After the Flood: Uncertainty and Disaster Planning
Can you ever really plan for mass fatalities? A world congress on disaster and emergency medicine met recently in Beijing China, to share experiences. The views from U.S., Japan and Haiti were as different as their recent disasters. But ethics was at the center of each discussion. An Institute of Medicine (IOM) summary of the meeting focuses on barriers to disaster … Continue reading »
Cost and Prevention of Violence – an “App” Challenge
When the government makes a list of the top places to put our limited funds, how do projects get prioritized? One measure always taken is the financial cost of the problem. Is it costing us enough to justify having the government step in? I wonder about the cost of peace. A recent workshop on the … Continue reading »
Where Have All the Science and Tech Jobs Gone?
Science and engineering together are a big, fast-growing part of the US workforce – more than 5 million people. Yet, many people in the US are still left out of science and engineering jobs. A new report from the Institute of Medicine (IOM) looks at the gaps, and what to do about them. The report, … Continue reading »